Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

1 What People Really Think About Foster Care Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies Conference 4 August 2010 Knowledge and Perceptions of the Australian.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "1 What People Really Think About Foster Care Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies Conference 4 August 2010 Knowledge and Perceptions of the Australian."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 What People Really Think About Foster Care Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies Conference 4 August 2010 Knowledge and Perceptions of the Australian Public UOW Melanie Randle Sara Dolnicar Leonie Miller Joseph Ciarrochi CareSouth Janenne Wells Chris Stubbs Dee Neveling Jo Munro

2 Acknowledgements CareSouth Industry Partner Australian Research Council and UOW Research Committee Funding CatholicCare Wollongong Collaborator

3 Today’s Presentation  Introduction  Prior Research  Study Aims  Methodology  Results Knowledge Perceptions  Conclusions and Implications  Future Research

4 Background: CareSouth  Began in 1994, recognition of a need to support children and families in the Shoalhaven  Grown to include the Illawarra, Shoalhaven, South Coast and Southern Tablelands regions of NSW  Provides a range of accommodation, care and support services for children, young people, adults with disabilities and their families residential accommodation for young people, disability programs, supervised contact and transport, Brighter Futures Illawarra, Psychology South, intensive family support, foster care, Family Choices, Aunties & Uncles program  Mission: supporting individuals, families and communities introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

5 The Current Situation  Currently over 34,000 children in out-of-home care, this figure has doubled in the last decade (AIHW, 2010)  The largest proportion of these are in foster care  The number of foster carers is decreasing “the number of foster carers has plummeted from 3,250 in 2001, to 1,000 in 2009, a decrease of 69 per cent” (Wooldridge, 2009)  Other trends: needs of children in care becoming increasingly complex, required care extending for longer periods, cost per child increasing (Wood, 2008)  These factors combined are making it more difficult to attract enough foster carers to cater for the children needing care introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

6 Why Marketing?  This challenge presents some similarities with marketing problems: 1. how to identify the right customers (individuals most likely to become foster carers); 2. design an attractive product (a foster care experience that is rewarding in some way); 3. attract them (convince them to begin foster caring); and 4. keep them loyal (have them continue on as foster carers for as long as possible)  Developing communications messages to attract foster carers (point 3 above) is the focus of this study introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

7 Prior Research  Most foster care research focuses on those already involved  Reasons for non-involvement offer some insight Spotlight on Safety (DoCS), 2006  Too old (27%); already have own children, that’s enough (11%); foster children would have too many problems (9%); not enough time/too many other things to do (9%); financially/can’t afford it (8%) Randle et al., 2009  I do not know anything about foster care (40%); too busy with own children, work, family/friends (24%, 24%, 25%); no one has ever asked me to (22%)  No insight as to the level of knowledge or extent of misconceptions about foster care within the population introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

8 Study Aims 1. Assess the level of knowledge of foster care within the general population (the lower this level, the more urgent the need for information campaigns); and 2. Identify perceptions (and/or misconceptions) amongst the population which might prevent people from becoming a foster carer (if such misconceptions exist, information campaigns are necessary to correct them and present a more realistic picture of foster care) introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

9 Methodology  Fieldwork Conducted Nov-Dec 2009 Online research panel Self-completion survey (approx 40 minutes)  Sample N=1,098 Screening criteria: individuals who (1) were between the ages of 18-64 (2) were Australian citizens or permanent residents; and (3) had not been a foster carer before Nationally representative for age, sex and state of residence introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

10 Methodology  Measures List of statements derived from qualitative interviews with case workers, foster care managers, recruitment coordinators, foster carers, people who have left care, academics (n=27) Final list of 24 knowledge statements and 49 perception statements Included statements relating to carers, foster children, allowances, biological families, training and support Statements randomly ordered for each participant to avoid bias introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

11 Results: Perceived Knowledge of Foster Care 31% of people felt they have a good understanding of foster care and 9% said they have little or no idea what it is. The majority - almost 60% - indicated they have some idea what it is. introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

12 Results: Knowledge of Foster Care (1/2) True False Unsure introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

13 Results: Knowledge of Foster Care (2/2) True False Unsure introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

14 Results: Knowledge of Foster Carers (1/2) True False Unsure introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

15 Results: Knowledge of Foster Carers (2/2) True False Unsure introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

16 Results: Perceptions of Foster Care and Allowances Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

17 Results: Perceptions of Foster Carers (1/2) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

18 Results: Perceptions of Foster Carers (2/2) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

19 Results: Perceptions of Foster Children (1/3) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

20 Results: Perceptions of Foster Children (2/3) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

21 Results: Perceptions of Foster Children (3/3) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

22 Results: Perceptions of Biological Families (1/2) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

23 Results: Perceptions of Biological Families (2/2) Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

24 Results: Perceptions of Training and Support Agree Disagree Neither agree nor disagree introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

25 Conclusions and Implications  There is a general understanding of what foster care is, however not good knowledge of specific aspects Communications need to be educative and provide a complete picture of foster care – including training, support, networks Multi-faceted benefits of foster caring – both for the child and the carers  Perceptions of children and biological families are not particularly negative Highlights importance of managing expectations of new carers  Application of marketing concepts can potentially assist in achieving organisational goals Marketing knowledge and expertise valuable within foster care organisations A wide range of different marketing approaches available introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

26 Future Research  Whether some groups within the community have better knowledge than others  Whether particular groups within the community are characterised by particular perceptions  Whether those most likely to become foster carers actually have good knowledge and accurate perceptions  Linking reasons for non-involvement with accuracy of perceptions introduction prior research methodologyresults conclusions and implications future research study aims

27 Thank you. Questions?


Download ppt "1 What People Really Think About Foster Care Association of Children’s Welfare Agencies Conference 4 August 2010 Knowledge and Perceptions of the Australian."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google